Confucian Qin Themes: Guan Ju
Confucian Qin Themes: Guan Ju
Confucian Qin Themes: Guan Ju
The themes of these melodies include both stories about Confucius and melodies
which specifically endorse Confucian principles. Other melodies which discuss the
virtues of ancient rulers could also be included here. Or the focus could be the
region of Confucius' home town, Qu Fu in Shandong province. Or one could
include melodies such as Guan Ju, connected to lyrics in the Book of Songs,
supposedly edited by Confucius.
The melodies listed here were all pubished during the Ming dynasty; no link to the
title means my reconstruction has not been finalized. Not included are several
further melodies that seem to have originated during the Qing dynasty.2
1. Huo Lin (Captured Unicorn)
A unicorn is captured at Da Ye, near Qufu. This is thought to be a lucky
omen, indicating a good prince is at hand, but Confucius reveals that in fact
it was unlucky, because no such prince is at hand. (Illustration)
2. Yi Lan (Lonely Orchid)
Confucius, after being rejected at many courts, returns home to Lu. He finds
a lovely orchid alone in a field, and compares it with himself. (Illustration)
3. Nanxun Ge (Song of Southern Breezes)
Nanfeng Ge, in Kongzi Jiayu,3 says,
Perhaps the two best known of these are listed in the Zha Guide as Wei
Bian and Du Yi (with variants); these are discussed further here. In sum,
although the stories of the Wei Bian and Du Yi seem to be similar, the two Wei
Bian melodies are musically unrelated to each other, and neither one seems to be
musically related to any of the Du Yi melodies. However, this is a preliminary
opinion based on examining the tablatures, not actually playing or hearing all the
meloides. Perhaps further study might show that there are indeed musical
relationships between them.
1. Leather Bindings ( Wei Bian)
Although the available existing tablature for a melody of this title, dated
1738, details a melody quite different from the one called Leather Bindings
Broken Thrice ( Wei Bian San Jue/Weibian Sanjue) that can be
heard in a modern recording, both of these Wei Bian melodies tell the same
story. Literary references include:
o For wei bian, 44069.176 quotes Zhu Xi, :
....
"In his old age Confucius loved to study the Book of Changes,
the order of the hexagrams, definitions, appendices,
interpretations, explanations and commentaries. He studied this
book so much that the leather thongs binding the wooden strips
wore out three times. "Give me a few years more," he said,
"and I shall become quite proficient!"
China Records 8-CD set of recordings from the 1950s, identifies the melody
only as from hand copied tablature, but a comment at the front of
the tablature/transcription in Guqin Quji (p. 265) says its source is
tablature transmitted by Jia Kuofeng, who was Le Ying's teacher. The
brief commentary on p. 10 of Guqin Quji says that the melody survived only
though that hand-copy, no printed scores. It then suggests that this modern
melody is related to that of the Wei Bian in the 1738 handbook and points to
the story shared withKongzi Du Yi. However, as mentioned above, my own
tentative examination comparing the two Wei Bian tablatures did not reveal
any musical relationship between them, nor any between either of them and
any of the Du Yi melodies mentioned next.
4. Du Yi (Reading the Yi Jing)
Zha's Guide lists five handbooks from 1739 (XVIII/187), giving as alternate
title Confucius Reading the Yi Jing ( Kongzi Du Yi) and Reading
the Yi Jing on an Autumn Evening ( Qiu Ye Du Yi). The five
handbooks with these titles are:
1. Qinxue Lianyao (1839; XVIII/187)
Du Yi; 41 sections, titled; yu yin; afterword says